ADMINISTRATOR GOLDIN'S STATEMENT ON NASA'S FORTIETH ANNIVERSARY

Forty years ago, in 1958, the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration was created with the boldest and most noble of
missions: to pioneer the future. We were told to explore new
frontiers and enhance life here on Earth. We were asked to
instruct; we were expected to inspire. Forty years later, thanks
to an American public with an unquenchable thirst for knowledge
and a relentless sense of adventure, NASA has delivered.

Think about this: Forty years ago, jet passenger service was
a novelty. Global communications meant a telephone line laid
across the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. When NASA was first
getting started, the only way to track hurricanes was to fly
planes directly over and into the storms. Our universe -- even
the cosmic neighborhood just above our atmosphere -- was a
mystery. In 1958, sending humans to the moon was pure science
fiction.

But we dared to dream. We imagined what could be possible.
And then along with our partners in industry and academia, we went
to work.

In 1998, hundreds of millions of people ride American jets
each year and new designs for flight go higher, faster and farther
than ever before. Global space communications have helped create
a global community. Weather satellites can detect the early
evolution of an El Ni–o condition months in advance. There are
still many mysteries to be solved, but Voyager, Galileo, the
Hubble Space Telescope and other planetary and astronomy missions
have circled neighboring planets, given us our first direct
evidence that black holes exist, and begun to peer back at the
very beginning of our universe. A space program that is forty
years old has sent astronauts to the moon, robots to Mars,
spacecraft to the furthest reaches of our solar system, and soon
will help build the International Space Station. And for every
step we take out there, we have contributed to a better quality of
life right here. That is true whether it be the Òspin-offÓ
technology that helps us detect breast cancer earlier, or the
child who looks up and knows that no longer is the sky the limit;
it is the stars and beyond.

NASA has had a great forty years, but what the American
people can be most proud of is this: when it comes to pioneering
the future, we are just getting started. What will always define
this aeronautics and space program -- and this country -- is our
firm belief that there will forever be something to invent,
somewhere to discover, someplace to visit.

Rest assured, NASA will do its best in the next forty years
to find out just what and where that will be.

NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC

September 30, 1998

NASA TURNS 40

"An Act to provide for research into the problems of flight
within and outside the Earth's atmosphere, and for other purposes"
-- with this simple preamble, the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) was created on October 1, 1958.

On Thursday, October 1, at 2 pm EDT, Administrator Daniel
Goldin will kick off NASA's celebration with an address to all
employees from the NASA Headquarters auditorium. He will be
joined by Susan Eisenhower, President of Eisenhower Inc. and a
visiting fellow at Harvard University, who will provide NASA
employees with an historical context within which to consider
their many accomplishments. The Headquarters 40th anniversary
program will be carried live on NASA Television. (NASA Television
is available on GE-2, transponder 9C.)

NASA will continue to celebrate its 40th anniversary
throughout the year by looking toward the future with its various
missions. On October 25, the Deep Space 1 mission will be
launched to demonstrate the first ion propulsion engine to operate
in deep space.

On October 29, NASA will nod to the past when Senator John
Glenn joins the rest of the STS-95 crew aboard Space Shuttle
Discovery. In November and December, the first components of the
International Space Station will be launched from Baikonur,
Kazahkstan, and Kennedy Space Center, Florida, beginning a new era
in long-term human space exploration.

NASA will return to Mars with the launches of the Mars
Climate Orbiter in December 1998 and the Mars Polar Lander in
January 1999. Also, early in 1999, NASA will continue its
commitment to cutting-edge astronomy by launching the Advanced X-
ray Astrophysics Facility.

Not content with looking only outward, NASA will turn its
vision to our own planet with the launch of the QuikScat satellite
on November 24, a "faster, better, cheaper" mission that will
study ocean winds and add to our knowledge of El Nino. The EOS-
AM-1 satellite, scheduled for launch in the summer of 1999, will
be the first of a new constellation of Earth Observing Satellites.

NASA will also continue its ground-breaking aeronautics
research by testing new propulsion technology with the Hyper-X
program. Looking toward the next 40 years, the
X-33 and X-34 programs will begin flight demonstration tests in
mid-1999 that will lead to the next generation space launch
vehicle.

Since its inception in 1958, NASA has accomplished many great
scientific and technological feats. At its 40th anniversary,
NASA remains a leading force in scientific research and continues
to stimulate public interest in aeronautics and aerospace
exploration, science, and technology. Perhaps more importantly,
NASA's exploration of space has taught humankind to view the Earth
and the universe in a new way.

More information on NASA's future programs can be found on
the NASA Homepage.